Last year, while many
of us were participating in the Bouchercon Mystery Convention, I posted what
I’d written at the request of a New York City-based newspaper to be part of its
9/11 10th year commemorative issue.
It was my story about where I was that Tuesday morning. This year 9/11
also falls on a Tuesday—next Tuesday to be precise—and so I thought I’d run my
piece again. After all, my memories are the same and it is an event never to be forgotten. As for Bouchercon, this year it’s in Cleveland, Ohio at the
Renaissance Hotel and many of our MIE crew will be appearing Saturday Morning,
October 6th at 10:15 AM in Grand Ballroom A in a panel titled, “Murder is
Everywhere.” Catchy, huh?
I like it over here by the United Nations. Beekman Place is different from other New
York City streets; it’s more like a quiet, residential private road in an
elegant European city. My walk to my
office is down First Avenue overlooking the East River and alongside the
gardens and flags of the UN. It gives me
a few daily moments of serenity and escape from the often out of control state
of my life as a lawyer here.
I need this walk today.
The sky is so blue and clear, except for the few smoke-like clouds on
the downtown horizon. I’m up by the UN
General Assembly Building when I call my friend Panos to find out how his date
went last night. He’s frantic and says
he can’t talk. He’s waiting for his
mother to call him from Greece. I ask if
everything is OK. He says she’ll be
worried when she hears that his office was struck by a plane. I must have misunderstood him. He works in the World Trade Center. He says his office building is burning and he
has to get off the phone.
Those are not clouds on the horizon, it’s smoke.
I tell him to get out of the building. He says it’s not necessary. He’s okay.
His date kept him out late and he’s still at home. He’ll go to work in the afternoon, after the
fire is out. He hangs up.
How could a plane have hit the World Trade Center on a day
as clear as this one? Something must
have happened to the pilot. I hear
sirens everywhere and move a little faster toward my office. By the time I get upstairs everyone is
looking out the windows on the south side of our building. It has an unobstructed view of the
Towers. Now they’re both burning. I’m told a second plane hit the second
Tower. We all know what that means—even
before learning about the Pentagon.
Someone tells me a plane hit Pittsburgh, my hometown. I can’t believe what I’m hearing. I call my daughter, she lives in Greenwich
Village. She’s frightened. We all are.
I tell her to keep calm. My son is in Cincinnati, I’m sure he’s safe but
I can’t reach him.
We’re all glued to the big screen TV in my law firm’s main
conference room. The first tower begins
to fall and we turn en masse from the television to look out our windows as it
crumbles to the ground before our eyes.
It’s surreal, it can’t be happening.
But it happens again. Not a word
is said while we watch the second tower fall.
We are at war. But with whom?
My mind can’t fix on what all this means. I focus on a rumor that there’s an imminent
biological anthrax attack and race to the pharmacy for enough antibiotic for my
daughter. That’s something I can do. Again, I think, my son is in Cincinnati. He’s safe there.
When I moved to NYC in 1969 my first job was blocks away
from the Trade Center site. The Towers
were in the midst of construction and I saw them every morning across the
Brooklyn Bridge as I’d head to work. In
August 1974 I watched Philippe Petit do his high wire walk between them, and
three years later glimpsed at mountain climber George Willig scale one in the
wind. Even after moving my office uptown
they were always in view from my window.
They spanned my career as a lawyer in NYC. I can’t believe they’re gone.
The City is in shock.
Lines of thousands of refugees from downtown are trekking up Third
Avenue toward home or simply to somewhere other than where they were. No one is talking. The smell is everywhere, acrid and
bitter. There seems to be grey dust on the
shoes of every cop and will be for days.
I stop at a restaurant halfway between my office and
home. It’s Greek and run by a
friend. It’s the only place I can think
of to go. There is no one at home and I
can’t get downtown to my daughter. She’s
fine. Panos comes in. I try making a joke about his date from last
night. I say he should marry her, she
saved his life. It’s not that funny.
A half dozen or so young men and women of about the age I
was when I started working in NYC are sitting quietly at a table along the
front windows. A cell phone rings—one of
the few that must be working—and one of the women answers. She’s a dark haired girl. She listens, shuts her phone and starts
sobbing. She says something to the
others; they hug each other and cry.
Damnit.
It’s after midnight by the time I head home. My cell phone rings on the way. It’s a friend from Capri in Italy. He’s been trying to reach me all day to see
if I’m okay. I hang up and continue
home. I’m tearing. Friendship like his is what life’s all
about. Family and friends are what
matter.
A week later I drive to my farm, get in my pickup and head
to Pittsburgh to visit my brother and sister-in-law. I decide not to go back to NYC but drive
south, toward the Outer Banks of North Carolina. I’ve never been there before, but it just
seems the place to be. I have to drive
by Washington, DC to get there. It’s only
when I see the first sign for DC that I realize I’ve made an unconscious
pilgrimage past the three sites of the 9/11 massacre—NYC, Western PA, DC.
Duck, NC is chilly in the off-season and the ocean is
wild. I lock myself in a hotel room
overlooking the sea and complete my first novel. I’m driven to make something good come out of
all of this bad. A week later I drive
back to NYC. I’m on the Jersey Turnpike
heading north and close to the City, but I can’t tell where it begins. Its southern landmark is gone. This world is insane.
A few years later I give up my life in NYC and move to the
Aegean island of Mykonos to pursue my dream of writing mysteries exploring the
heart and soul of Greece. There is no
reason to wait any longer. Is there?
Jeff—Saturday
Jeff, we have spoken elsewhere on this blog about these events. My first published fiction was about them: a short story called Baggage Claim in "Queens Noir." Your memories are so vivid. That's the thing. It all comes back. Especially the smell. And what a gorgeous morning it had started out. When you buy me that coffe coffee you owe me at Bouchercon, we'll talk about other things: how we both realized a dream since then.
ReplyDeleteCan't wait, Annamaria. Espresso, cappuccino, or French press?
DeleteMorning: cappuccino. Afternoon: espresso. I am really Italian when it comes to coffee.
DeleteA moving post - it brought the morning's horrors back from the the recesses of the mind where they stay tucked away until The Date rolls around again. I am flying to Washington DC next Tuesday. . .the memories will stay vivid I can assure you as I board that plane. . .
ReplyDeleteYes, J&J, those memories will never fade. Just lurk in the background for the rest of our lives. Travel safe.
DeleteWhat a frightening day for you, your family, and friends. And so many others. I only remember feeling sick from my vantage point in California. I think I was in shock, like so many. Today, I still get tears in my eyes from this. Ten year anniversary or eleven years, it really doesn't matter. There are things you don't forget.
ReplyDeleteYour right, Lil, it doesn't matter. And yes, friends and family do.
ReplyDeleteAhh, Jeffrey -- wonderful writing, terrible events. Like you, I was in New York, in a hotel and scheduled for an 11 AM pickup to the airport. I kept smelling something acrid but my windows faced uptown. I went down with my bags, and the guy behind the desk--not a regular desk person, a custodian--said, "You ain't going nowhere."
ReplyDeleteAnd I didn't. But for the next five or six days, many of the people stranded in that hotel became friends. Some of those friendships still endure. But that's small comfort in the wake of an evil that killed all those people and also, I think, damaged this country in ways it will take decades to assess.
Thanks, Tim. And glad you got out this morning!
ReplyDelete